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18:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum maybe Im not understanding, but I see that image and I can't understand how the events are executed one by one: sdz-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/prod/upload/…
You are expecting to understand something very quickly!
user1596138
@BenjaminGruenbaum youtube.com/watch?v=jMqQBLZwRIE was going to send you this before I remembered where you are from. It's not about that. Just one of his insights I remembered
@AngelLuis I'm not sure what to say other than that it's going to take time and effort to understand - keep your chin up and don't worry about it. I can also recommend a good OS book.
@Jhawins Jews (or people from Israel) don't have a monopoly on hating Hitler but thanks. I'm late to a pub - will keep it open and watch when I get back :)
!!afk beers
I don't hate him
@BenjaminGruenbaum maybe it's a question at very low level of the OS, but in all the articles they say the same "JS it's single threaded" but it's also "non-blocking". And I say ok, I'm leaving something xD
user1596138
18:03
@BenjaminGruenbaum uh... You can definitely see why I clarified that tho. Enjoy beers
user1596138
The video isn't even actually about Hitler tho he's just the example for the point
@Jhawins oh fuck I remember that
@BenjaminGruenbaum thanks for your replies and enjoy ;)
@AngelLuis BenjaminGruenbaum is afk: beers
anyone know of any software to spoof both the user agent and user agent javascript variables in Chrome? My stupid school requires you to install software to use their Wifi unless it is a chromebook/android/ios device.
18:13
lul
@Jhawins And here I thought you meant Sterling
The standard of requiring people to install software to access your wifi is in my opinion less secure.
user1596138
@William Click emulator....
user1596138
Spoofing a browser should be pretty trivial lol
18:15
user agent is easy but apparently that isn't enough. It throws this really weird error in fact.
> org.apache.jasper.JasperException: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: No enum constant com.bsc.agent.PersistentAgentPlatform.IOS IPAD
org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServletWrapper.handleJspException(JspServletWrapper.java:561)
org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServletWrapper.service(JspServletWrapper.java:477)
org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet.serviceJspFile(JspServlet.java:395)
org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet.service(JspServlet.java:339)
javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:731)
i mean...
PersistentAgentPlatform.IOS IPAD
that space looks out of place
iOS IPAD user agent string works on my safari's mac but not windows shrug not sure why
maybe it is a different user agent string then
different plug in
Installing software is overly clever.
user1596138
It might be smarter to just adhere to the security policy you agreed to.
user1596138
Just a thought
Well its between that and using a chromebook
well at school
user1596138
18:24
Didn't you say you could just install their software
lol not going to happen
user1596138
We have trolls, you can be easily outed, it will cost you. But that's on you
It requires antivirus software from reading and frankly I am not giving
Nobody knows the school I go to
user1596138
:)
My point is nobody should have to install an exe to get onto wifi unless you work for the CIA maybe.
user1596138
18:29
Unless you agreed that you would lol
why not?
this is a public college nobody should have to do this again.
it's their wifi
they can make whatever demands they want
its publicly owned wifi
you don't have to use it
user1596138
18:30
It's school owned wifi
user1596138
You don't own the school because it's a public school lol
Any person can legally step onto public own campus period. They can't prevent people from entering because it isn't privately owned. The wifi should work the same way.
They are using tax payers $
user1596138
Lmao no
that's not how it works
user1596138
18:32
THey can definitely prevent someone specifically from entering also
@Jhawins wrong. Not with out a court order.
user1596138
Do our statements contradict each other? I think not.
court orders are quite rare and will take a year
in the mean time you can do whatever you want
user1596138
So they are incapable of protecting students, nice but infeasible
they can arrest you
but they need a reason
user1596138
18:34
Things don't work the way you wish they did. That's all I got to say lol. Sue them to remove the security policy that you agreed to
my point is that this wifi software doesn't really help with security at all
might be cheaper to buy a chromebook
^ lol
actually looking on ebay for one
it's likely that the software is there to protect the network more so than to protect you
user1596138
^
user1596138
18:38
Tell us what software it is
it scans the computer and is throwing an error for a reason I don't know
that is why I am frustrated
user1596138
I'm gonna go tell the state to piss off charging me taxes on my vehicle registration. THESE ARE PUBLIC ROADS
nice try
@Jhawins You can walk or bike them for free. Also they can't tell you to leave public property with out a substational causee.
that will hold up in court
I'm just trying to bike on the wifi
user1596138
We both suck so bad at examples
user1596138
18:42
@KendallFrey You think my new PC will play KSP at a decent framerate finally :D
I'll post the script tomorrow, but literally it is sad bad because I was thinking I will use linux/ubuntu. Nope
depends on how many parts
They require to install a script on ubuntu
user1596138
All of the parts
user1596138
cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/… CPU is only 100% better lol
18:44
The network application is called "Bradford Dissolvable Agent"
different school but similar guide bradford.sgu.edu/registration/Instructions.jsp#Linux
My school used to not require this which is stupid
> I have just signed up for a course costing <...>, and as part of this course i am entitled to use the college network.
the reddit post yeah I saw that
lol
so... all it does is run, do a scan of the pc, then delete itself.
what's the harm?
Because the scan fails but doesn't tell me why
contact it
18:52
I likely only get 1 contact with the IT staff so I want to determine where the wholes are first
If I contact about three different issues well it might make everything tricky
I figured if they can't get a Chromebook to connect then well I can contact management to change the system. I know iPad user agents get around the issue not sure about everything else.
I'm not against installing software but I am against not being able to connect
Okay last reason this is frustrating as I'm guessing this school's network requires no AVG software while my works wifi requires AVG software to connect superuser.com/questions/478688/…
Just using that random answer as a source
lol
you'd likely have a better time dealing with work than the school
except works requirement to have AVG software actually makes sense
preventing you from having it doesn't make sense
sure, but they're the ones more likely to be able to do something about it
that is probably true. Which is why I was hoping there is a universal way to get around this issue when I encounter it again.
a school is unlikely to make an exception for a student that will be gone in a few years anyway, an employer on the other hand has more reason to bend to keep you around.
Especially if it's an issue related to education
function slide(var) {

     if ( parseInt( var.css('marginLeft') ) >= -2160 ){

        var.animate({'margin-left': '-='+width}, animationSpeed, function() {
        });

      }

}

onclick='(document.getElementById('slides'))'
heh
a var named var
19:09
hmm doesn't that throw an en error
@William Only in strict mode IIRC
!!> var = 42; var
@MadaraUchiha "SyntaxError: missing variable name"
!!> (function(var){ return var; })(42)
@MadaraUchiha "SyntaxError: missing formal parameter"
hah
and look who answered it, @SterlingArcher
19:10
hmm, guess it is an error then
-1
Q: How to use function parameters with jQuery onclick?

Ahmed Sayedfunction slide(var) { if ( parseInt( var.css('marginLeft') ) >= -2160 ){ var.animate({'margin-left': '-='+width}, animationSpeed, function() { }); } } onclick='(document.getElementById('slides'))' How can I make this function work by replacing the function parame...

shocking lol
19:44
lol gnikcohs
trying to come up with a synonym for "binary", in the context of "it's a binary choice"
it's for a codepen pen title. Don't want to make it seem like it's about a numerical system
black and white would normally be a good way of saying it too, but again, the context is both tech and graphics, so both are misleading
good and evil.
left and right
3
A: Word that means having a choice between two options

moonstar Dilemma . - a situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two different things you could do: Dilemma seems to have a negative connotation but you could predicate it with "happy" as in happy dilemma. Typically such situations are referred to as "Good problem to have".

male and female, good and evil, on and off
I mean, binary generally means 2 choices, regardless of context
19:47
huh, I don't usually associate "dilemma" with a binary choice
+ and -
so, the pen would originally be called "binary choice". But it has no neat numerical system stuff
now I've moved on to some different name, but I'm still curious
baphomet (mostly joking)
I dropped a component from 488 lines to code to 288, and it's more readable and more efficient :D
'Dilemma' may be interpreted as a boolean choice if you take the question too literally, otherwise, it's not ^^
19:53
@Ganzert Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
Note the 'boolean' in this context is a direct synonym for 'binary'.
I haven't done canvas in a while, this better feel good :3
will be extremely simple
A dilema isn't limited to 2 options though
I agree with sterling
in that case hotdog and not hotdog are binary. :P
19:56
There really isn't a neutral phrase for "2 choices", there's the phrase "between a rock and a hard place" however that implies both choices are not ideal
Please, check my answer above ^^
In the hot dog case you may try and find an answer by performing 'Reductio ad absurdum'
@SterlingArcher can you give me two mutually exclusive choices that require thinking about, and either are ideal?
Context?
Would you like to look left or right
just trying to think of what that would look like
@towc chocolate and vanilla
19:58
@SterlingArcher neither is going to be ideal
@KendallFrey you tried
That's all context specific, we don't know if looking left or right has negative responses
Unless the context of repercussions is present, they are simply choices presented
@SterlingArcher if the context is irrelevant, they don't require thinking about anyway
Check the XOR truth table and go with your own ideas
Well if context is irrelevant then you have choices, since you cannot determine if said choices is a dilema or not
it means they're identical for the context of our knowledge, so it doesn't fit my scenario
20:01
I'll grab a coffee, see you later on guys, best of luck towc ^^
Your scenario doesn't make sense without context though
@towc So you're asking for a consequential decision with no consequences.
@Jhawins dang dude, not bad at all
decent price too
huh, super interesting:
Ok, it's quiz time! What do you think will be logged? Vote in the poll in the next tweet, and don't reveal the answer to others… (h/t to @shavounet for this puzzler)
let x = 0;

async function test() {
  x += await 2;
  console.log(x);
}

test();
x += 1;
console.log(x);

// what's going to be logged?
I had 2 obvious solutions, turns out both were wrong
user1596138
@Loktar I thought so. A portable powerhouse
user1596138
20:12
Can I seriously get away with <500W PSU tho? All the calculators said <400 but I'm skeptical
@towc 1, then 2
Interesting. I mean, it makes sense, kind of, but I didn't expect it
the bottom log is going to run before the async returns
@SterlingArcher did you figure it out yourself?
if so, that's pretty impressive
@SterlingArcher sure, but then why not 1, 3?
however, x is not modified when the async function runs, so it's 0+2 not 1+2
Yes, I've run into that issue before that's how I knew
20:13
await isn't really that helpful browser side. Server side some in my opinion.
I mean, I know why now, but it would have taken me a long time to guess it
Knowing is half the battle, and now you know!
@SterlingArcher well, kudos to you
code not async is going to blaze through
so it's always going to hit first
😃 i knew something
20:14
posted on May 24, 2018 by Myles Borins

Notable Changes This is a follow up release to fix two regressions that were introduced in v10.2.0. Commits [2a9c83321b] - http: fix res emit close before user finish (Robert Nagy) #20941 [0b1ba20fc0] - src: re-integrate headers into node.h (Anna Henningsen) #20939 [52f21fbfbc] - test: mark test-zlib.zlib-binding.deflate as flaky (Matheus Marchini) #20935 Windows 32-bit Installer: https://no

@towc I take it await always yields?
This is not the case in C#
what do you mean by "yield" here?
as in, run the part after the function before resuming the function
I'm pretty sure the analogous C# would give 2, 3
async function test() {
  console.log('test is running', x);
  x += await 2;
  console.log(x);
}
Add in this console statement to see the execution
that doesn't give any new information to me
20:16
since test is called before x is assigned to 1, x is 0, waiting to be assigned +2
It would still be perfectly valid to have it increment from 1 to 3
It would yes, depending on execution order, no?
at least, that's a sensible standard, if not the one they chose
@Jhawins also nj picking a modular power supply
those are so much easier to work with
just looked over the build a bit closer
@SterlingArcher that's also fine, but I'd have thought that, as x += await 2 gets expanded to x = x + await 2 which would (erroneously) be like x = await x + 2, and the resolution of the await would have waited until the end of the sync part, x would have been 1 already
20:17
@towc That's not necessarily erroneous
That makes sense. The result is entire driven on what is called first: test() or += 1
Until explicitly ruled out by a standard
@SterlingArcher Assuming you know what the standards say
Which I think the point of the question is that most people don't
ecma standards?
@KendallFrey wait, so the behaviour for this is currently ambiguous?
Whoever decided that x += await constant; should 1) yield 2) evaluate x before yielding.
@towc I doubt it, but I don't know where it's standardized
20:19
oh, just not immediately intuitive
Basically, knowing standard behaviour for a += b isn't enough to solve it
I mean... unless you've dealt with it before or know the standards nothing is immediately intuitive
you can tell it's an aspen cause of the way it is
I'd say it is ambiguous and should be avoided
20:21
@FaizalMunna only if you want to open-source it.
@TravisWhite ambiguous how?
modifying a non-localized variable in an async function and outside of it
That's not what I meant
g dang it
Is it ambiguous because it's implementation-defined?
Because people reading the code won't know what it does without research?
20:23
what a beaut
oh, no I don't know, I just mean most developers won't know what should happen just by looking at it, so it makes sense to avoid it, and seems it could be avoided rather easily
is someone who makes a choice called a "choicee"?
I fucking hate that argument
Language features are there to be used.
If someone doesn't know how to use a language feature, they can learn.
@towc chooser
true, but confusing code slows down development, and seems rather easily avoidable
that... would make sense
20:25
@TravisWhite avoid "clever" code, sure, but if the situation calls for an obscure pattern, use it.
Can you give me a real life example where you'd need to do it this way? Just seems easily avoidable to me, and adds ambiguity
If there is no other way to handle the situation, then go for it, but leave a small note so future devs don't assume incorrectly
I've written some crazy looking code out of necessity :)
@TravisWhite No
or perhaps lack of knowledge, sometimes both
You're right, commenting such stuff is usually a good idea
commenting code is for the weak
20:30
I try to write code that doesn't need comments, as I've dealt with dated/incorrect comments before and was more confusing than no comments
When I do comment, I usually comment why I've done something, but not what. I agree that the code should explain what its doing on its own, but sometimes you need to comment why, so other developers can understand why it looks weird or bad
Just name your methods and variables properly, and give your code plenty of space to breathe
I agree
@TravisWhite sometimes it's not obvious that what you're doing is ambiguous
a problem throughout life
user1596138
@Loktar yea did you see how small my case is? I had to find a small form factor (<160mm) PSU and then modular seemed like it would help out a ton routing stuff
user1596138
20:36
I'm ordering most everything but the Ram and GPU now. Corssing my fingers that we are on the cusp of a price decrease for nand and GPUs
user1596138
Also that SSD is insane haha I'm excited about that. The mobo has dual m.2 slots so if I expand later I can just buy a second one
user1596138
I can also remove a few large drive bays and fit a radiator to water cool the Ryzen, if I decide to.
hi all. quick q to get you distracted:
is there a way to build an array without keys?

i'm trying to build

this.cat = [
{id:1, name: blah, color: red},
{id:2, name: yes, color:blue},
{id:3, name: jjj, color: purple}
]

but when i build my array using for loop, i get this array with keys

this.cat = [
0: {id:1, name: blah, color: red},
1: {id:2, name: yes, color:blue},
2: {id:3, name: jjj, color: purple}
]
i'm trying to build an array full of objects separated by commas
what method are you using to build your array? are those not the same thing?
i create an empty array
then i was going through a for loop and building it with array.push
i'm now following this to see if this would work but no luck
https://stackoverflow.com/a/41252669/151438
my example was pretty basic. here is the actual code. i have a function, i pass in a number, and i want to spit out an array with a bunch of objects

YourMother.prototype.buildNodes = function(nodeData) {
var nodesToPaint = [];

var len = nodeData.length;
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
nodesToPaint[i] = {
id:nodeData[i],
label: 'Node '+nodeData[i],
title: 'Lorem ipsum dolor',
number: nodeData[i],
x: null,
y: null,
borderWidth: 22,
color: '#494949',
border: '#494949',
shape:'box',
size: 100
};
}
20:44
push is what I typically use, are you sure those aren't the same thing? Just how dev tools display it?
when i do push, it seems to create a key value like

this.cat = [
0: {id:1, name: blah, color: red},
1: {id:2, name: yes, color:blue},
2: {id:3, name: jjj, color: purple}
]

i need to return it like
this.cat = [
{id:1, name: blah, color: red},
{id:2, name: yes, color:blue},
{id:3, name: jjj, color: purple}
]

without the keys
where's cap
return it to what? display it? functionally they are the same data?
functionality wise they are same...ok...let me play with it more
I think I'll spend the night re-rewatching rick and morty
unless someone has a better idea
20:51
play video games
anyone here scared of the wordpress gutenberg about to come out this year

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